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1 of 35 chapter: 8 >> Krugman/Wells ©2009  Worth Publishers Causes of Unemployment.

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Presentation on theme: "1 of 35 chapter: 8 >> Krugman/Wells ©2009  Worth Publishers Causes of Unemployment."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 of 35 chapter: 8 >> Krugman/Wells ©2009  Worth Publishers Causes of Unemployment

2 2 of 35 WHAT YOU WILL LEARN IN THIS CHAPTER  The three different types of unemployment and their causes.  The factors that determine the natural rate of unemployment.

3 3 of 35 The Nature of Unemployment  Workers who spend time looking for employment are engaged in job search.  Frictional unemployment is unemployment due to the time workers spend in job search.  Structural unemployment is unemployment that results when there are more people seeking jobs in a labor market than there are jobs available at the current wage.

4 4 of 35 The Nature of Unemployment Distribution of the Unemployed by Duration

5 5 of 35 Structural Unemployment The Effect of a Minimum Wage on the Labor Market Quantity of Labor W Wage Rate W F E Q D Q E Q S Structural unemployment Minimu m wage

6 6 of 35 Structural Unemployment  Minimum wages - a government-mandated floor on the price of labor. In the U.S., the national minimum wage in 2005 was $5.15 an hour.  Unions - by bargaining for all a firm’s workers collectively (collective bargaining), unions can often win higher wages from employers than the market would have otherwise provided when workers bargained individually.

7 7 of 35 Structural Unemployment  Efficiency wages - wages that employers set above the equilibrium wage rate as an incentive for better performance.  Side effects of government policies - public policies designed to help workers who lose their jobs; these policies can lead to structural unemployment as an unintended side effect.

8 8 of 35 The Natural Rate of Unemployment  The natural rate of unemployment is the normal unemployment rate around which the actual unemployment rate fluctuates. It is the unemployment rate that arises from the effects of frictional plus structural unemployment.  Cyclical unemployment is a deviation in the actual rate of unemployment from the natural rate.

9 9 of 35 The Natural Rate of Unemployment  Natural unemployment = Frictional unemployment + Structural unemployment  Actual unemployment = Natural unemployment + Cyclical unemployment

10 10 of 35 Changes in the Natural Rate of Unemployment The Changing Makeup of the U.S. Labor Force Year Percent of labor force 1948 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2007 50% 40 30 20 10

11 11 of 35 FOR INQUIRING MINDS An Unemployment Lockdown?  Most analysts believe that the natural rate of unemployment in the United States has fallen substantially since 1980; the Congressional Budget Office estimate has fallen from 6.2% to 4.8%.  One factor is that many of those who would otherwise be counted as unemployed may be behind bars.  Largely owing to changes in law enforcement strategies, the number of American adults in jail or prison has risen from 503,586 in 1980, or 0.5% of the labor force, to 2.3 million, or 1.5% of the labor force, in 2007.  The rise in the prison population might have lopped about 0.2 percentage points off the natural rate of unemployment.

12 12 of 35 ►ECONOMICS IN ACTION Structural Unemployment in Eastern Germany  A spontaneous popular uprising in 1989 overthrew the communist dictatorship in East Germany.  After reunification, employment in East Germany plunged. The economy of the former East Germany has remained persistently depressed, with an unemployment rate of more than 16% in 2008.  East Germany found itself suffering from severe structural unemployment.  When Germany was reunified, it became clear that workers in East Germany were much less productive than their cousins in the west.  The result has been a persistently large mismatch between the number of workers demanded and the number of those seeking jobs.

13 13 of 35 SUMMARY 1.The unemployment rate is affected by the business cycle. The unemployment rate generally falls when the growth rate of real GDP is above average and generally increases when the growth rate of real GDP is below average. 2.Job creation and destruction, as well as voluntary job separations, lead to job search and frictional unemployment. In addition, a variety of factors such as minimum wages, unions, efficiency wages, and government policies designed to help laid-off workers result in a situation in which there is a surplus of labor at the market wage rate, creating structural unemployment. As a result, the natural rate of unemployment, the sum of frictional and structural employment, is well above zero, even when jobs are plentiful.

14 14 of 35 SUMMARY 3.The actual unemployment rate is equal to the natural rate of unemployment plus cyclical unemployment. 4.The natural rate of unemployment changes over time. 5.Policy makers worry about inflation as well as unemployment.

15 15 of 35 The End Unemployment coming attraction: Inflation


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